A German police officer and unidentified people prepare to enter a house believed to belong to crashed Germanwings flight 4U 9524 co-pilot Andreas Lubitz in Montabaur, March 26, 2015. The co-pilot suspected of deliberately crashing a Germanwings jet into the French Alps on Tuesday has been identified as 28-year-old Andreas Lubitz. Announcing his details at a news conference on Thursday, Marseille prosecutor Brice Robin said he had no known links with terrorism.”There is no reason to suspect a terrorist attack,” he said. Asked whether he believed the crash that killed 150 people was the result of suicide, he said: “People who commit suicide usually do so alone….I don’t call it a suicide.” The German citizen, left in sole control of the Airbus A320 after the captain left the cockpit, refused to re-open the door and pressed a button that sent the jet into its fatal descent, the prosecutor told a news conference carried on live television. REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski
A German police officer and unidentified people prepare to enter a house believed to belong to crashed Germanwings flight 4U 9524 co-pilot Lubitz in Montabaur
Lapatilla